Before Treatment Begins

Before Treatment Begins

As you consider having extensive dental treatment, it may be beneficial for you to review the following points:

Time Commitment. Because of the nature of dentistry, it may be necessary for you to take some time off work. A few longer reservations are generally more efficient and less inconvenient than many short reservations. This will minimize your time in the office. Usually, the best time to have a long reservation is in the morning. Once the treatment has begun, it needs to be completed in a timely fashion. If treatment is delayed or missed, it could change the proposed treatment plan. This could adversely affect the total cost to you.

Dentistry is both an art and a science. In complicated and technically difficult cases, and because of our high standards, it may prove necessary to redo a portion or go back and retake impressions or remake crowns, etc.

Make certain you are aware of what treatment is required to reach your goals of treatment. If you do not understand why we have made a particular recommendation or treatment sequence, or the length of treatment required, please ask us for clarification before treatment begins. It is possible that previously undetected dental problems will be discovered once tooth preparation has begun. When this occurs after the treatment plan has been developed, you will be immediately informed.

You should be comfortable with the financial investment before any treatment is begun. Establish your dental budget. This will determine how much and how quickly treatment can proceed. Understand that you, and not your insurance carrier, are ultimately responsible for the total cost of treatment. If you would like to have more treatment than you can easily afford at one time, we have partnered with two outside financial institutions to help make your investment affordable on a monthly basis. Payment is expected as work is completed.

Thorough oral self-care is very important, both at the beginning of treatment and afterward. The better your oral health is, the easier the filling/restoration process will be.

While dental fillings/restorations function well for years of service, nothing lasts forever. Not us, not dental fillings or restorations. We use the best available dental materials and techniques, but the reality is that some fillings and restorations simply last longer than others. With today’s longer life span, the filling/restoration might even wear out! The better you maintain your dental fillings/restorations, the longer they will last. Just as with anything else, proper maintenance is required.

Before beginning treatment, understand clearly what will be required of you for daily oral self-care, your periodic professional dental hygiene recare appointments, and the limitations of the restorations and dental prostheses you will receive. This means that you must brush and floss your teeth as instructed every day. When extensive dentistry is completed, a 3- to 4-month interval for periodic dental hygiene recare appointments is strongly advised.

Dental restorations are subject to the same physical abuse as natural teeth. Whatever oral habits will break a natural, undrilled, undamaged tooth, such as chewing ice, biting fingernails, hard objects etc. -will probably be able to break a filling/restoration as well. Expansion and contraction for hot liquids and cold foods can cause damage, as can the wet, dark, bacteria-filled oral environment of the oval cavity.

If you have ever considered whitening your teeth, the time to do it is before dental restorations are placed in teeth that are visible when you talk or smile. If you are interested in tooth whitening, ask us now!